Each egg weighs 1/6 pound (2 2/3 ounces)
1.5 dozen = 18. The unit cost is misspecified and therefore ambiguous. At ten cents each, that would be 180 cents At ten cents for three, it would be 60 cents.
200 each/x dozen=12 each/1 dozen 200/12=16 dozen with 8 left over.
1-1/2 dozen = 18. There are six 3s in 18. Each 3 costs 10 cents,so the lot costs 6 x 10 = 60 cents.
2 dozen*50c*1.08 =24*50*1.08 = 1296 cents = 12.96 major units of currency - dollars, Euros, whatever.
Two and a half dozen is equal to 30. Each dozen is 12, and a half a dozen is 6, so the equation you can use to figure that out is 12 x 2 + 6 = 30.
Limes can cost anywhere between $0.98 for a dozen or $0.25 each.
There is a dozen (that is 12) right so it is $1.00 Each
There about $ 3 .oo each dozen. Its a pretty gud price.
There about $ 3 .oo each dozen. Its a pretty gud price.
1.5 dozen = 18. The unit cost is misspecified and therefore ambiguous. At ten cents each, that would be 180 cents At ten cents for three, it would be 60 cents.
$3.00
If each dozen costs 0.80 then you can get 33.75 dozens with 27
200 each/x dozen=12 each/1 dozen 200/12=16 dozen with 8 left over.
If you find a dozen eggs for $1.20, and then figure out the cost for each egg ($0.10 or ten cents), you have figured out the unit cost. Or the price for one in a group.
Eight dozen eggs is eight sets of twelve eggs each. Each dozen costs $2.50 So you have: $2.50 + $2.50 + $2.50 + $2.50 + $2.50 + $2.50 + $2.50 + $2.50 which is equal to 8 x $2.50, or $20
Each dozen is equal to 12 cookies so for each dozen multiply that by 12.
Depends on price per doz. your locale. A dozen is around 2.50 give or take nationwide so each would be around .21 cents.